![]() alfred sisley (1839-1899)
biography
paul cézanne
f.auerbach |
"Alfred Sisley painted a world of tranquility without sentiment."
biography
Alfred Sisley was born on the 30th October 1839, in Paris, France. His parents were English.
Of the artists who
exhibited at the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874, it was
Alfred Sisley who was the purest landscape painter. In an oeuvre
of almost 900 oil paintings he produced less than a dozen still
lifes and only one or two genre scenes. All of his remaining works
are landscapes, and throughout his career he favored the same kind
of environment whether in the forest of Fontainebleau, in Louveciennes,
London, Moret, or Wales. His works tend to be calm with little attention
paid to cityscapes or recent industrialization. They are often devoid
of people, any figures or staffage in them being used as compositional
devices or perhaps narrative elements rather than as a means of
representing a humanized landscape.
During his
first trip to London, from 1857-61, he discovered the work of
the English landscape painters Turner, Constable, and Bonnington,
and the influence of England and English art remained strong throughout
his career. In this Sisley was not unusual; other members of the
Impressionist group such as Monet, Pissarro, and Renoir were looking
to recent precedents in their desire for an art which reflected
landscape in as naturalistic a way as possible. They deliberately
flouted the strict academic precepts of the École des Beaux-Arts,
with its emphasis on the historical landscape that derived ultimately
from Claude and Poussin, and turned instead to the Barbizon painters.
Sisley's landscape at the Salon of 1868, Avenue of Chestnut
Trees near La Celle Saint-Cloud (Southampton), demonstrates
an acquaintance with the soft tonality of Corot and the dramatic
massing of Courbet, both of whom were to remain influential.
At the first
Impressionist exhibition, Sisley exhibited six landscapes (only
five appeared in the catalogue) with little critical or financial
success. His Autumn: Banks of the Seine near Bougival (1873;
Montreal) was criticized for being sketch-like and apparently
unfinished, a common complaint levelled against other Impressionist
painters who adopted an uncomprising stance to painting out of
doors with a much freer execution than found in the work of older
artists. In this work, Sisley's mature characteristics are evident:
an emphasis on the sky to light the picture and create atmosphere
and give an indication of time and weather conditions (with which
Constable had been concerned). This was emphasized with a clear
tonality coupled with judicious use of colour--the autumnal oranges
are offset against the blue sky. The seemingly informal composition
of the work is constructed with great feeling for space.
After the
exhibition Sisley returned to England, this time under the patronage
of the French baritone Jean-Baptiste Faure, from July to October
1874. In London he painted a series of canvases at Hampton Court
which are remarkably fresh and spontaneous. Molesey Weir, Hampton
Court (1874; Edinburgh) is compositionally daring with the
posts of the weir creating a system of rigid verticals which holds
the picture together and leads the viewer's eye into the picture
space in no less a contrived way than Poussin might have done.
Yet it appears relaxed and informal with thick white impasto,
and the figures of the naked bathers are executed with great economy
of means. Sisley exhibited
at the second and third Impressionists exhibitions but met with
little critical acclaim until he received a mention in Georges
Rivière's L'Impressioniste, which was sympathetic
to the Impressionist cause. He wrote of Sisley's charming talent,
his taste, subtlety, and tranquillity. It is in these terms that
present-day reviewers regard Sisley. Unlike Monet or Renoir he
did not confront urban life in his landscapes, and his view of
nature was not shaped by anarchist politics like Pissarro's. Instead
he painted a timeless yet unsentimental view of nature in which
man, although present, is never the controlling force.
![]() Alfred Sisley At the Beach in Guernsey Canvas Print (Canvas Size: 24 inches)
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